A Limerick A Day to Keep You On Your Way April 22 Waking Up Thinking

April 22

Waking Up Thinking

There was a thought, came in the morning.

Happened just before she stopped snoring.

Profound,

No sound.

It went away without a warning.

 

There you are in the sweetest of sleeps.  You somehow know you will be waking up soon because you sense a connection to your subconscious mind and conscious mind.  A project you are working, an engaging conversation, a great idea: all these thoughts are flowing through your mind. 

Now you really are waking up. You are going over those great thoughts believing you will remember them as the day goes on.   Yeah, that is what I tell myself.  But the truth is I have in my mind written some amazing limericks, repeated them in my head and told myself I will write it out later in the day when I have the time.

Sure Paula.  That is awesome.  You know what happens,  repeatedly?  I forget what I didn’t write down.  One would think I may have learned my lesson yet but I am still working on it.  I even have said just turn your phone on and speak it.  It’s not that hard.

This is all comes around again to the ability to give yourself a command and follow through.  I can be so diligent about certain things, like never forgetting to recharge my phone, which is highly important for my business, but still struggle with doing something I know will propel me to another level of success.  The warning here for me is not so much the great limerick I wrote in my head, it is the warning to stop listening to the lie I will remember it.  And the deeper lie … because I cannot remember is somehow a character flaw. 

if I let those sabotaging voices continue they would talk me right out of ever writing again. 

Maybe my limericks are only great to me.  It’s not the point.  Feeling good about commanding myself to be in charge, stay in charge and finish my goal will do far for me than the whole world reading my writings.  Of course I still want the whole world to, but I will just keeping working on that.

Warning….listen to those morning thoughts and write them down.  Our subconscious mind has lots to say.

A Limerick A Day to Keep You On Your Way April 21 Word Thinking

 April 21

Word Thinking

The power of words is no light thing.

What messages do you want to bring?

Written, spoken, or read,

It matters what is said.

Let them be a wellspring of ev’rything.

A Limerick A Day to Keep You On Your Way April 20 Coincidental Thinking

April 20

Coincidental Thinking

Thought about history repeating,

Events that appear non-competing.

Coincidental,

Transcendental.

Evil will have its final meeting.

Can it be true that the heart of man is desperately evil? 

From the first murder recorded in the bible to today man does seem to have a desire to inflict evil upon each other.  I certainly have had some very unkind thoughts toward my fellow man.  Perhaps not to the degree of actually taking another person’s life but the bible does say all have fallen short of the glory of God and none are righteous. If not for the love of Jesus we would all be doomed to hell.  Thankfully He paid the price for us not to end up there.  But many never call on His name and are drawn into the evil temptations that are in their heart.

I often like to research a day’s historical events.  This search was very grievous for it revealed some horrific events in history that do indeed make us search our hearts to try and understand what causes a person to be drawn into the depths of such evil.   

On April 20, 1999 the Columbine High School shooting took place.  It was considered the worst school shooting but tragically more have happened.  April 20, 1889, was the day Adolf Hitler was born.  He left an evil legacy of death as well.  In my short trip into history I found recorded in the month of April two more evil events.  April 19, 1995 the Oklahoma bombing killed 168 people and injured 850 people. The Virginia Tech shooting took place April 16, 2007 where 32 people died and 17 were injured.

Only God can know the deepest depth of a soul’s heart and truly understand why.  I know that God is not to blame for man’s evil and He is always calling out for us to come to Him. I also know the evil one himself, satan, comes to tempt us all.  He knows our weakest points and if we are not careful to stay as close to the Word of truth as we can then anyone of us could be drawn away. Lord help us stay close.

The evil one does have his day though.  The day he can no longer tempt us, the day he finally meets his end and is cast into the eternal abyss.  I wonder if it takes place in April?

A Limerick A Day to Keep You On Your Way April 19 What To Think About Thinking

April 19

What To Think About Thinking

To filyour mind with the world’s viewpoint,

May leave you feeling quite out of joint.

To get straight,

Meditate.

Let the Word of God be the checkpoint.

Philippians 4:8 ESV

Finally, brothers, whatever is true, whatever is honorable, whatever is just, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is commendable, if there is any excellence, if there is anything worthy of praise, think about these things.

A Limerick A Day to Keep You On Your Way April 18 White Rose Thinking

April 18

White Rose Thinking

 

We are your bad conscience, no peace.

We lived to see the evil cease.

Our words we executed.

Our lives you executed.

Apathy was not your release.

 

Holocaust Resistance: The White Rose – A Lesson in Dissent   by Jacob G. Hornberger

Jewish Armed Resistance

The date was February 22, 1943. Hans Scholl and his sister Sophie, along with their best friend, Christoph Probst, were scheduled to be executed by Nazi officials that afternoon. The prison guards were so impressed with the calm and bravery of the prisoners in the face of impending death that they violated regulations by permitting them to meet together one last time. Hans, a medical student at the University of Munich, was 24. Sophie, a student, was 21. Christoph, a medical student, was 22.

This is the story of The White Rose. It is a lesson in dissent. It is a tale of courage, of principle, of honor. It is detailed in three books, The White Rose (1970) by Inge Scholl, A Noble Treason (1979) by Richard Hanser, and An Honourable Defeat (1994) by Anton Gill.

Hans and Sophie Scholl were German teenagers in the 1930s. Like other young Germans, they enthusiastically joined the Hitler Youth. They believed that Adolf Hitler was leading Germany and the German people back to greatness.

Their parents were not so enthusiastic. Their father, Robert Scholl, told his children that Hitler and the Nazis were leading Germany down a road of destruction. Later, in 1942, he would serve time in a Nazi prison for telling his secretary: “The war! It is already lost. This Hitler is God’s scourge on mankind, and if the war doesn’t end soon the Russians will be sitting in Berlin.” Gradually, Hans and Sophie began realizing that their father was right. They concluded that, in the name of freedom and the greater good of the German nation, Hitler and the Nazis were enslaving and destroying the German people.

They also knew that open dissent was impossible in Nazi Germany, especially after the start of World War II. Most Germans took the traditional position, that once war breaks out, it is the duty of the citizen to support the troops by supporting the government. But Hans and Sophie Scholl believed differently. They believed that it was the duty of a citizen, even in times of war, to stand up against an evil regime, especially when it is sending hundreds of thousands of its citizens to their deaths.

The Scholl siblings began sharing their feelings with a few of their friends, Christoph Probst, Alexander Schmorell, Willi Graf, as well as with Kurt Huber, their psychology and philosophy professor.

Hans Scholl (left), Sophie Scholl and Christoph Probst, leaders of the White Rose resistance organization. Munich 1942 (USHMM Photo)

One day in 1942, copies of a leaflet entitled “The White Rose” suddenly appeared at the University of Munich. The leaflet contained an anonymous essay that said that the Nazi system had slowly imprisoned the German people and was now destroying them. The Nazi regime had turned evil. It was time, the essay said, for Germans to rise up and resist the tyranny of their own government. At the bottom of the essay, the following request appeared: “Please make as many copies of this leaflet as you can and distribute them.”

The leaflet caused a tremendous stir among the student body. It was the first time that internal dissent against the Nazi regime had surfaced in Germany. The essay had been secretly written and distributed by Hans Scholl and his friends.

Another leaflet appeared soon afterward. And then another. And another. Ultimately, there were six leaflets published and distributed by Hans and Sophie Scholl and their friends, four under the title “The White Rose” and two under the title “Leaflets of the Resistance.” Their publication took place periodically between 1942 and 1943, interrupted for a few months when Hans and his friends were temporarily sent to the Eastern Front to fight against the Russians.

The members of The White Rose, of course, had to act cautiously. The Nazi regime maintained an iron grip over German society. Internal dissent was quickly and efficiently smashed by the Gestapo. Hans and Sophie Scholl and their friends knew what would happen to them if they were caught.

People began receiving copies of the leaflets in the mail. Students at the University of Hamburg began copying and distributing them. Copies began turning up in different parts of Germany and Austria. Moreover, as Hanser points out, the members of The White Rose did not limit themselves to leaflets. Graffiti began appearing in large letters on streets and buildings all over Munich: “Down with Hitler! . . . Hitler the Mass Murderer!” and “Freiheit! . . . Freiheit! . . . Freedom! . . . Freedom!”

The Gestapo was driven into a frenzy. It knew that the authors were having to procure large quantities of paper, envelopes, and postage. It knew that they were using a duplicating machine. But despite the Gestapo’s best efforts, it was unable to catch the perpetrators.

One day, February 18, 1943, Hans’ and Sophie’s luck ran out. They were caught leaving pamphlets at the University of Munich and were arrested. A search disclosed evidence of Christoph Probst’s participation, and he too was soon arrested. The three of them were indicted for treason.

On February 22, four days after their arrest, their trial began. The presiding judge, Roland Freisler, chief justice of the People’s Court of the Greater German Reich, had been sent from Berlin. Hanser writes:

He conducted the trial as if the future of the Reich were indeed at stake. He roared denunciations of the accused as if he were not the judge but the prosecutor. He behaved alternately like an actor ranting through an overwritten role in an implausible melodrama and a Grand Inquisitor calling down eternal damnation on the heads of the three irredeemable heretics before him. . . . No witnesses were called, since the defendants had admitted everything. The proceedings consisted almost entirely of Roland Freisler’s denunciation and abuse, punctuated from time to time by half-hearted offerings from the court-appointed defense attorneys, one of whom summed up his case with the observation, “I can only say fiat justitia. Let justice be done.” By which he meant: Let the accused get what they deserve.

Freisler and the other accusers could not understand what had happened to these German youths. After all, they all came from nice German families. They all had attended German schools. They had been members of the Hitler Youth. How could they have turned out to be traitors? What had so twisted and warped their minds?

Sophie Scholl shocked everyone in the courtroom when she remarked to Freisler: “Somebody, after all, had to make a start. What we wrote and said is also believed by many others. They just don’t dare to express themselves as we did.” Later in the proceedings, she said to him: “You know the war is lost. Why don’t you have the courage to face it?”

In the middle of the trial, Robert and Magdalene Scholl tried to enter the courtroom. Magdalene said to the guard: “But I’m the mother of two of the accused.” The guard responded: “You should have brought them up better.” Robert Scholl forced his way into the courtroom and told the court that he was there to defend his children. He was seized and forcibly escorted outside. The entire courtroom heard him shout: “One day there will be another kind of justice! One day they will go down in history!”

Robert Freisler pronounced his judgment on the three defendants: Guilty of treason. Their sentence: Death.

They were escorted back to Stadelheim prison, where the guards permitted Hans and Sophie to have one last visit with their parents. Hans met with them first, and then Sophie. Hansen writes:

His eyes were clear and steady and he showed no sign of dejection or despair. He thanked his parents again for the love and warmth they had given him and he asked them to convey his affection and regard to a number of friends, whom he named. Here, for a moment, tears threatened, and he turned away to spare his parents the pain of seeing them. Facing them again, his shoulders were back and he smiled. . . .

Then a woman prison guard brought in Sophie. . . . Her mother tentatively offered her some candy, which Hans had declined. “Gladly,” said Sophie, taking it. “After all, I haven’t had any lunch!” She, too, looked somehow smaller, as if drawn together, but her face was clear and her smile was fresh and unforced, with something in it that her parents read as triumph. “Sophie, Sophie,” her mother murmured, as if to herself. “To think you’ll never be coming through the door again!” Sophie’s smile was gentle. “Ah, Mother,” she said. “Those few little years. . . .” Sophie Scholl looked at her parents and was strong in her pride and certainty. “We took everything upon ourselves,” she said. “What we did will cause waves.” Her mother spoke again: “Sophie,” she said softly, “Remember Jesus.” “Yes,” replied Sophie earnestly, almost commandingly, “but you, too.” She left them, her parents, Robert and Magdalene Scholl, with her face still lit by the smile they loved so well and would never see again. She was perfectly composed as she was led away. Robert Mohr [a Gestapo official], who had come out to the prison on business of his own, saw her in her cell immediately afterwards, and she was crying. It was the first time Robert Mohr had seen her in tears, and she apologized. “I have just said good-bye to my parents,” she said. “You understand . . .” She had not cried before her parents. For them she had smiled.

No relatives visited Christoph Probst. His wife, who had just had their third child, was in the hospital. Neither she nor any members of his family even knew that he was on trial or that he had been sentenced to death. While his faith in God had always been deep and unwavering, he had never committed to a certain faith. On the eve of his death, a Catholic priest admitted him into the church in articulo mortis, at the point of death. “Now,” he said, “my death will be easy and joyful.”

That afternoon, the prison guards permitted Hans, Sophie, and Christoph to have one last visit together. Sophie was then led to the guillotine. One observer described her as she walked to her death: “Without turning a hair, without flinching.” Christoph Probst was next. Hans Scholl was last; just before he was beheaded, Hans cried out: “Long live freedom!”

Unfortunately, they were not the last to die. The Gestapo’s investigation was relentless. Later tried and executed were Alex Schmorell (age 25), Willi Graf (age 25), and Kurt Huber (age 49). Students at the University of Hamburg were either executed or sent to concentration camps.

Today, every German knows the story of The White Rose. A square at the University of Munich is named after Hans and Sophie Scholl. And there are streets, squares, and schools all over Germany named for the members of The White Rose. The German movie The White Rose is now found in video stores in Germany and the United States. Richard Hansen sums up the story of The White Rose:

In the vogue words of the time, the Scholls and their friends represented the “other” Germany, the land of poets and thinkers, in contrast to the Germany that was reverting to barbarism and trying to take the world with it. What they were and what they did would have been “other” in any society at any time. What they did transcended the easy division of good-German/bad-German and lifted them above the nationalism of time-bound events. Their actions made them enduring symbols of the struggle, universal and timeless, for the freedom of the human spirit wherever and whenever it is threatened.

 

Sources: The Future of Freedom Foundation. Mr. Hornberger is founder and president of The Future of Freedom Foundation.

www.HolocaustResearchProject.org

A Limerick A Day to Keep You On Your Way April 17 Hoop It Thinking

April 17

Hoop It Thinking

Mrs. Hoopit knew the neighborhood scoop.

She made sure to be in everyone’s loop.

Her head became large,

T’was time to take charge.

The neighbors crowned her with a hula hoop.

 

Hoop it – A phrase directed at someone, meaning for them to go find something else to do or get lost usually due to being extremely annoying. (Urban Dictionary)

A Limerick A Day to Keep You On Your Way April 16 FOG Thinking

April 16

FOG Thinking

There was a lady who liked to blog.

She was most happy when there was SMOG.

The air clear.

You ask, where?

Everywhere, she walked in a FOG.

SMOG – Supernatural Manifestation Of God        FOG- Favor of God  

A Limerick A Day to Keep You On Your Way April 15 Taxed Thinking

April 15

Taxed Thinking

There once was a man named Carter,

He lived quite well with just a barter.

Excellent exchange.

No need for change.

Till the fool who said taxes were smarter.

A Limerick A Day to Keep You On Your Way April 14 Double Minded Thinking

April 14

Double Minded Thinking

There once was a man who was unstable.

Thought the bible was just a fable.

 Till fate,

He ate,

The food of the Word from the Master’s table.

James 1 King James Version (KJV)

James, a servant of God and of the Lord Jesus Christ, to the twelve tribes which are scattered abroad, greeting.

My brethren, count it all joy when ye fall into divers temptations;

Knowing this, that the trying of your faith worketh patience.

But let patience have her perfect work, that ye may be perfect and entire, wanting nothing.

If any of you lack wisdom, let him ask of God, that giveth to all men liberally, and upbraideth not; and it shall be given him.

But let him ask in faith, nothing wavering. For he that wavereth is like a wave of the sea driven with the wind and tossed.

For let not that man think that he shall receive any thing of the Lord.

A double minded man is unstable in all his ways.

Let the brother of low degree rejoice in that he is exalted:

10 But the rich, in that he is made low: because as the flower of the grass he shall pass away.

11 For the sun is no sooner risen with a burning heat, but it withereth the grass, and the flower thereof falleth, and the grace of the fashion of it perisheth: so also shall the rich man fade away in his ways.

12 Blessed is the man that endureth temptation: for when he is tried, he shall receive the crown of life, which the Lord hath promised to them that love him.

13 Let no man say when he is tempted, I am tempted of God: for God cannot be tempted with evil, neither tempteth he any man:

14 But every man is tempted, when he is drawn away of his own lust, and enticed.

15 Then when lust hath conceived, it bringeth forth sin: and sin, when it is finished, bringeth forth death.

16 Do not err, my beloved brethren.

17 Every good gift and every perfect gift is from above, and cometh down from the Father of lights, with whom is no variableness, neither shadow of turning.

18 Of his own will begat he us with the word of truth, that we should be a kind of firstfruits of his creatures.

19 Wherefore, my beloved brethren, let every man be swift to hear, slow to speak, slow to wrath:

20 For the wrath of man worketh not the righteousness of God.

21 Wherefore lay apart all filthiness and superfluity of naughtiness, and receive with meekness the engrafted word, which is able to save your souls.

22 But be ye doers of the word, and not hearers only, deceiving your own selves.

23 For if any be a hearer of the word, and not a doer, he is like unto a man beholding his natural face in a glass:

24 For he beholdeth himself, and goeth his way, and straightway forgetteth what manner of man he was.

25 But whoso looketh into the perfect law of liberty, and continueth therein, he being not a forgetful hearer, but a doer of the work, this man shall be blessed in his deed.

26 If any man among you seem to be religious, and bridleth not his tongue, but deceiveth his own heart, this man’s religion is vain.

27 Pure religion and undefiled before God and the Father is this, To visit the fatherless and widows in their affliction, and to keep himself unspotted from the world.

 

A Limerick A Day to Keep You On Your Way April 13 Mirror Image Thinking

April 13

Mirror Image Thinking

There once was a mom who raised two lasses.

She trained them to get up off their asses.

When they could reason,

There was no pleasin”.

Adult children see through their own glasses.

 

Don’t expect others to behave or think as you. If you do, you fall trap to Mirror Imaging. This can be with spouses, friends, workers, children, your business employees and so on.  We can have great conversations and feel we are thinking alike but a situation may arise when suddenly there are very different reactions and behaviors we didn’t count on.

I raised two beautiful young woman who have more than blown me away with the raising of their own children.  Their responses and reactions are downright foreign to me at times.  It has caused arguments, hurt feelings and them feeling disrespected and believing I think they are bad moms.  I know they are great moms and doing the best they can, just as I did.

Today it was revealed that my own fear is clouding my responses.  Even after many years of counseling and time spent with my Lord repenting and asking forgiveness for poor choices I made in raising my children and experiencing my Lord wash me clean of such things I fall trap to rescuing my grandchildren from what I perceive as words or behaviors from my children that may so how damage them for life.  Grandmother’s love I used to think.  And I do love my grandchildren but fear needs to be uprooted. The process may take longer than I desire but I am so glad this truth was revealed.  Oh Lord, help me trust You more.

If I made it through childhood trauma and so did my kids then surely my grandchildren will too!  My Lord is well aware of every word that is spoken over us.  My prayer is to trust Him to give me deeper discernment to be still and only speak when absolutely necessary.

One really great way to have discernment is to place yourself in the other person’s shoes.  Try to see life through their perspective and not your own life experiences.  When you respond based on your experience you unwittingly can make the other person feel not validated.  You are viewing their experience through your eyes.  That is mirror imaging.

Let’s switch to the working world.  If you are a leader or business owner select a team to think like the people you are trying to reach such as shoppers, mothers, children, etc.  Once the team members are thinking alike set up a situation or circumstance that places them in the role of the people they are trying to reach.  Ask them how they would react.  Then ask yourself if you expected them to react in a certain way.  You will see so many more perspectives you may never have thought of. This helps to not use your own experience to decide how another would react.

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